Acoustics and Psychoacoustics

Acoustics and Psychoacoustics

Draft of April 25, 2016 2: ACOUSTICS AND PSYCHOACOUSTICS Introduction The raw material that we are working with is sound. Our purpose is to develop effective ways to use sound to convey useful information. It is the relationships that we can construct using sound that enable its articulation. The design space, therefore, is largely constrained by the type and richness of of the sonic relationships employed. The objective of this chapter, therefore, is to investigate the properties of sound that afford the construction of such relationships. The working assumption is that the better we understand such properties, the more effectively we can use sound. It is sometimes said that design is choice. If that is so, then the quality of design is affected by the richness of the alternatives that one has to choose from and the criteria used in selection. Here we hope to provide the acoustic and perceptual foundation to support both. There are three classes of relationships that can be used to encode meaning into sound: • intrasound relationships: These are relationships established among the parameters of individual sounds themselves. For example, a message or datum may be encoded by establishing a particular relationship among the pitch, timbre and duration of a sound. • intersound relationships: These are relationships that are established between or among sounds. It is through the pattern of sounds that meaning is conveyed. A simple example would be assigning specific meaning to a particular motif. • extrasound relationships: These are relationships that are established between sound and entities that exist outside the domain of sound. For example, the sound of knocking on a door tells us about someone wanting to enter, rather than something about sound. Buxton, Gaver & Bly 2.1 Psychoacoustics While these classes are not mutually exclusive, and can be used in combination, they provide a useful vocabulary for our study. First, they help us categorize the work of others for comparative purposes. Second, they help us in the process and rationalization of design. Third, they help guide our study of raw materials. They help us know what to look for, and to recognize properties of sound that can be exploited (or avoided). "Utterances" in the vocabulary of nonspeech audio take the form of one or more audio events. Our working model is that of each event constituting an instantiation of a sonic object. One can best think of an object as having some more-or-less invariant parameters that identify it as emanating from a particular source, and one or more other "run-time," or instantiation variables - that is, parameters that may change on or during each instantiation. The notion of the source of a sonic object is important. It is closely related (if not identical) to timbre. These are the parameters of the object that cause us to associate the sound as coming from a trumpet or flute, or a closing door or breaking glass1. Within the design space of nonspeech audio, one can choose from among the repertoire of object classes (i.e., sources or timbres), and then set the parameters that control their instantiations, such as pitch, duration and loudness. Just as we have classes of sonic relationships, so do we distinguish between two classes of applying parameters to the instantiation variables: • fully formed objects: These are sonic objects whose instantiation variables are fully specified when the sound is initiated. For example, if we want to create an audio display of an existing three dimensional data set, we might use one dimension to determine the object used, and the other two to determine the pitch and duration. When the object is invoked, all parameters are fully specified. • evolutionary objects: These are sonic objects in which one or more instantiation variables are updated (continuously or discretely) during the life-span of the object. For example, we may want to monitor a sensor by mapping its temperature to the pitch of a sustained sound object. In this case, for example, as the temperature goes up, so does the pitch. Like the categorizations discussed above, these distinctions don't specify what mappings to use. That is a much larger topic. Our purpose, in this chapter is to lay out some of the options that exist to be used in such mappings. We now proceed to look at the properties of sound and our perceptual system. Hopefully the above discussion will change what follows from a basic course in (psycho)acoustics, to a hunt for properties and opportunities that can be exploited in later designs. Our discussion has to do with applied acoustics and psychoacoustics. Thus, although we cover a wide range of topics, this discussion is not comprehensive in either depth or breadth. For more information on acoustics, see Lindsay & Norman (1977), Kinsler, et al. (1982), Roederer (1975), or Askill (1979). For more information on psychoacoustics, see Lindsay & Norman (1977), Boff & Lincoln (1988), Scharf & Buus (1986), Scharf & Houtsma (1986), Evans (1982), Benade (1960). For more information on music acoustics, perception and cognition, see Deutsch (1982), Pierce (1983), Mathews & Pierce (1990) and Dowling & Harwood (1986). Finally, the Acoustical Society of America (500 Sunnyside Blvd., Woodbury, N.Y. 11797) distributes a compact disk of auditory demonstrations which is an excellent compliment to this chapter. The disk costs $20. US. Payment must be included with the order, and be drawn on a US bank. 1 Note, however, that later in the chapter on Everyday Listening, we argue that there are special properties of sounds that emanate from everyday objects such as doors, compared to sounds such as would emanate from a musical instrument. Buxton, Gaver & Bly 2.2 Psychoacoustics Draft of April 25, 2016 Acoustics Sounds are pressure variations that propagate in an elastic medium (for our purposes, the air). Our ears are essentially very sensitive barometers that sense these pressure variations and transforms them into a form which can be accommodated by the brain. There are a number of useful ways to analyze these pressure variations. One is to represent them as graphs of waves. Waveforms Figure 1 shows the waveform of a simple sound, with the amplitude of pressure variation on the abscissa, and time on the ordinate. Amplitude Time period = 1/frequency Figure 1. A simple waveform. This kind of graph shows sound in the time domain. This is a periodic wave, that is, it repeats itself. The time it takes to complete a complete cycle is called the period of the wave, and is equal to 1/frequency. The actual wavelength of the signal is the distance that sound can travel in the interval of one period. This can be expressed as: l = c p (1) or l = c / f (2) where l is the wavelength, c is the speed of sound1, p is the period of the wave and f is the frequency of the vibration. The type of wave shown is a sine wave. It can be considered the simplest kind of waveform (for purposes which we will soon discover.) Sound Example 2.1: A sine wave. A sine wave is presented at three different frequencies: 100 Hz., 1,000 Hz and 10,000 Hz. The sequence is presented twice. Fourier analysis and spectral plots Sine waves are very rarely the result of natural events. In fact, there are few mechanical devices that create them (even the sound produced by a tuning fork is complex, particularly at the beginning). However, because of their mathematical properties they are extremely useful for acoustic theory. In particular, Fourier analysis allows the expression of any (well, almost any) complex wave as the sum of a number of sine waves of different frequencies, amplitudes and phases (see Figure 2). 1 334 metres/sec. (1130 feet/sec.) can be used for the speed of sound in air. But note that the speed of sound varies with the temperature. This value assumes an air temperature of 21o C., or 71o F.). Buxton, Gaver & Bly 2.3 Psychoacoustics + = Figure 2 Two sine waves of different frequencies, amplitudes, and phases may be added to create a complex wave. Conversely, complex waves may be analyzed into their components via Fourier analysis. When a wave is Fourier analyzed, the results may be shown in a spectral plot (Figures 3 to 6 show both spectral plots and waveforms). The spectrum of a wave is a two dimensional representation showing the amplitudes of sine waves of different frequencies that comprise the wave. Each spike on a spectral plot corresponds to a sine wave. So, in Figure 3, the spike in the spectral plot on the left corresponds to a single sine wave, shown on the right. 1. Sine wave Frequency Domain Time Domain amp amp time frequency Figure 3. A sine wave shown in the frequency domain (as a spectral plot) and the time domain (as a waveform). More Complex waves Sounds in nature are more complex that the examples that we have seen thus far. Figure 4 shows a more complex wave. The different spikes of energy seen in the spectral plot are called partials, with the lowest frequency being the first partial, the next higher the second partial, and so on. This is an example of a special class of sound in which the frequencies of the partials are integer multiples of the lowest, fundamental, frequency. When this is the case, the partials above the fundamental are also called harmonics of the fundamental frequency, and the class of sound is called harmonic. Harmonic sounds are periodic (their period is the same as its fundamental), and have a definite pitch. Harmonic sounds are relatively rare in the natural environment, but most musical instruments are designed to produce harmonic or near harmonic sounds.

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